Picture how you typically handle quarterly planning. Youâve taken days (or even weeks) to gather input from stakeholders, youâve put together the perfect slide deck, and youâre ready to implement your meticulously crafted plan. Teams understand whatâs being asked of them, and theyâre ready to go.
Then, right as the new quarter starts, a competitor makes an announcement: Theyâve released a new feature that changes everything. What can you do? You need to pivotâbut do your careful plans account for change?
Itâs easy to treat your initial plans as the finish line, but to be agile and adaptable, plans should be treated as living documents that mark just the beginning of the race. In a true pivot-ready culture, planning is about more than estimating tasks and deadlines for teams; itâs about ensuring company-wide alignment and responsiveness.Â
You need a way to create a unified program vision, maintain momentum, and shift strategy without losing speed. In this blog post, weâll break down the strategies to overcome common planning challenges and show how you can use Lucid to level up your planning and create a flexible, pivot-ready culture.
Common planning challenges that businesses face
Despite the best intentions to respond well to change, many organizations find it difficult to overcome ingrained habits that stall momentum. Understanding the specific barriers that keep businesses âstuckâ is the first step toward building a more responsive culture.Â
These are three common challenges companies often face during planning sessions. Â
Adaptability
Changing market conditions, customer feedback, and technical debt donât wait for the next planning cycle. However, many companies treat quarterly planning as a fixed destination and record their plans in a static document such as a slide deck. This approach locks teams into projects, and as the original plan becomes obsolete, people lose the ability to pivot without causing confusion.
Alignment
Cross-functional blind spots are a major barrier to organizational alignment. When teams work in silos, success is limited to individual departments, especially when each team has its own way of tracking and measuring progress. Without a shared visual language or a single source of truth, teams often end up working toward different versions of company goals. This disconnect makes a truly synchronized strategy impossible.
Visibility
Thereâs often a massive separation between high-level strategic goals and the granular work that teams deliver. When this split occurs, people arenât sure whether daily tasks support larger goals, and teams lose confidence in their ability to execute within expected timelines. If companies struggle to close the gap between strategy and execution, contributors lose sight of the âwhyâ behind their tasks, and leaders lack clarity on the progression of work.Â
Strategies to overcome these challenges and level up your planning
Establishing a culture thatâs truly change-ready requires a shift in mindset. You need more than a system of record like Jira, Azure DevOps, or Smartsheet. You also need a system of action where actual thinking and planning occur alongside documentation of work to be done.Â
A system of action provides a space to collaborate, problem-solve, visualize possibilities, facilitate conversations, and reach a shared understanding. When you turn your planning space into a system of action, you can anticipate the need to react and better prepare for change.
Weâll break down key strategies you can use to implement Lucid as your system of action, connecting strategy to reality as you maintain a flexible culture.Â
Align teams with a unified strategic vision
Bring teams into your quarterly planning sessions and share documentation with them to ensure everyone is working under a unified vision. By using templates in a visual collaboration solution, you can move beyond static documentation to bring everyone together on a canvas that can be updated to reflect the most recent information. Empower teams to work independently while remaining linked to broader program goals.Â
Lucid provides the tools you need to visualize and organize multiple teams or workflows. Whether you conduct quarterly planning, big room planning, or PI planning, Lucidâs customizable templates help teams establish clear objectives and visualize work that supports the broader vision.Â